White Ivy

White Ivy

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  • Create Date:2020-11-04 04:10:08
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Susie Yang
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Editor Reviews

09/14/2020

Nonchalant deceit and reluctant honesty undergird generational struggle in Yang’s excellent debut. Ivy Lin doesn’t remember her parents’ leaving her in China in 1982 when she was two years old to be cared for by her grandmother, Meifeng. But Ivy’s cold, unloving reunion with her parents in Boston when she’s five makes permanent the chasm already within the family. Only when Meifeng moves as well, two years later, does Ivy find some comfort and companionship. As Ivy grows into a tempestuous 14-year-old, her and Meifeng’s trips to Goodwill and yard sales come with lessons in stealing: “give with one hand and take with the other,” Meifeng tells her. “No one will be watching both.” Then Ivy meets a politician’s son, golden boy Gideon Speyer. Her crush on him blossoms into obsession, and after Ivy’s parents discover she has been sneaking out with boys from the neighborhood, they send her to spend the summer in China. She returns with renewed resolve to defy her parents’ expectations and to become a part of Gideon’s life and high-class social circles. After Ivy’s mother loses her job, the family relocates to New Jersey, and Ivy spends more time near Gideon after high school. But after Gideon proposes and her presumed happily-ever-after nears, Ivy’s past mistakes catch up to her, and she must choose between family and social status. In Ivy, Yang has created an ambitious and sharp yet believably flawed heroine who will win over any reader, and the accomplished plot is layered and full of revelations. This is a beguiling and shattering coming-of-age story. (Nov.)

Publishers Weekly

Reviews

jnmegan

A superbly impressive debut from an author with an unlikely background in pharmacy and tech, White Ivy by Susie Yang is an excellent character study and an absorbing read. Ivy is just a young girl when she immigrates from China to join her parents who have already settled in Massachusetts. Up until then, she had been raised by her grandmother, from whom she learned how to proudly steal and cheat. She continues these practices when she arrives in the U.S., ashamed of her humble origins and her family’s poverty. She longs to be accepted by the other children at school, and idolizes the wealth and ease experienced by her mostly white peers. She especially is enamored of a boy named Gideon, who seems to embody all the qualities she would love to possess. Ivy pines for the golden boy, but her only real fiend is Roux, a boy from a similar background to her own. Now an adult, Ivy finally seems on the cusp of achieving all she desires with Gideon when Roux, now a man with unsavory connections, pops unexpectedly back into her life. Ivy is torn between assimilation with the WASP family she has always wanted and the allure of the dangerous “bad boy” who knows her true personality. Ivy is a complicated character and Yang does a fabulous job portraying her devious and manipulative nature while also evoking sympathy for her. Completely lacking a moral compass and desperate to escape what she believes is a traumatically embarrassing family, Ivy’s grasping and striving is at once pathetic and horrific. This cunning duality, maintaining a façade of compliance and impeccable manners as a cover for naked ambition makes for an engrossing story. The unexpected ending takes an interesting turn and yet makes perfect sense given the author’s skillful unveiling of events. White Ivy is a compulsive read, a gripping and unique twist on the immigration tale with a truly unforgettable and unrepentant “protagonist.” Thanks to the author, Simon & Schuster and Library Thing for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an unbiased review.